MSI's Trident 3 is a future-proof, upgradeable console-killer

A small form-factor gaming PC really can be as capable as its larger siblings, as MSI have proven with their Trident 3. This console-sized machine is more than capable for its size, offering a great gaming experience at low noise, and isn’t full of proprietary parts that will end the upgrade life of your PC prematurely.

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With the Trident 3, MSI have not shied away from a PC gamer’s need to tinker with their systems. While you will need to grab a screwdriver and drive it straight through that ‘warranty void if removed’ sticker, all the parts within the Trident 3 are entirely standard.

Of course, there are some limitations to your modding. You won’t be able to throw in a Titan Xp without some serious changes to both the chassis and PSU - if you are looking to do that, I don’t think this console-esque PC is for you. The Trident 3 makes use of mini-ITX graphics cards and while we only had a mini-ITX GTX 1050 Ti to hand, this completely standard PCB design fits without issue. What this represents is the rare opportunity, when it comes to small form factor (SFF) pre-builts, to keep upgrading your graphics card down the line.

There is one limitation to your ambition, however, and that’s power. The Trident 3 only comes with a 230W PSU, which doesn’t leave much in the way of headroom. Our own benchmarking has a GTX 1070 running at 246W peak wattage under load. There goes that idea, right? Well, not so fast…

While there may be little benefit in changing up your graphics card right now with limited options available under the power draw limit of the system, there could be the opportunity to upgrade generationally. The Trident 3 got to ~165W power draw from the wall under load, so there is a little room to manoeuvre. Nvidia’s Volta may well deliver a card within the restricted wattage requirements of the Trident, and with the way Volta is looking right now, the next-gen could provide quite a boost to performance over Pascal cards. Of course, this does rely on Nvidia and AMD keeping the power requirements down… *cough* Vega *cough*

Mini-ITX graphics cards seem to be gaining popularity among builders and manufacturers alike, so a choice of cards shouldn’t be an issue once third-party cooler designs start arriving on the scene.

Our Trident 3 model was £1,200 at launch, however, these particular specs are no longer available. MSI now only have two models available in the UK - the i5-7400, and the i7-7700, both with GTX 1060 3GB cards, and priced at £1,100 and £1,300 respectively.

On the CPU side, it’s a regular LGA-1151 socket, although the i7 model will provide plenty enough processing power for some time. Not that Kaby Lake has much of an upgrade path now anyways. On the i5 model, you could always upgrade down the line to an i7, which could provide quite a boost.

Temperatures never reached more than 80° Celsius on the graphics card, even at peak gaming demand. The single-fan graphics card does a valiant job keeping temps in check, and it’s not particularly noisy either. I struggled to hear the machine at all over the hubbub of our office.

The CPU does run a little hotter, with an idle temp of 43°C, which is a little out of my comfort zone for any personal PC builds. At peak usage during benchmarking, the CPU reached 87°C, a little on the hot side.

Just as I went to set this machine up, utilising the VR passthrough port on the front, I stumbled across the biggest flaw I found with the Trident 3. Modern TVs tend to utilise HDMI almost exclusively these days, however, so do both the Oculus Rift and HTC Vive straight out of the box. Due to the single HDMI port on the graphics card, I was stuck searching desperately for a DVI to HDMI adapter to connect VR, as my TV already occupied the single HDMI port. Luckily, I had the adapters required nearby, either DisplayPort or DVI will do, but this could be an issue for someone who wants to get straight to VR gaming without all the hassle.

The lack of proprietary parts allows some wiggle room in the next few generations of components, which is not something found often with pre-built SFF PCs. For the amount of connectivity and features packed in the console-sized Trident 3 chassis, it’s quite the accomplishment by MSI to keep parts standard.

The Trident 3 offers a full-size gaming experience in a little package, and it achieves this while using standardised parts. With plenty of connectivity, and despite the annoying bloatware… defiantly, the MSI Trident 3 shows everyone that you can make a console for PC gamers, without removing everything PC gamers love.

Well if it uses a non-proprietary PSU, like SFX, a few brands have been getting into that game and you can get a Corsair unit with 600w, plus didn't go and check but this case now makes an argument for that announced Gigabyte Mini GTX1080 because it might be able to fit in there.

How can you call it "future proof" When it has an H110 motherboard and a locked i7, instead of say a B350 board with an R5 1600? Since intel is abandoning that socket, and AM4 is supposed to be supported until 2020.

Especially with your UK options being a 3GB 1060, which is just too limiting for the money IMO, not that we have any real options between $150 and $500 USD right now for GPUs.

I'm sorry but it's £1000+ for a 1080p gaming machine. Sure you can push 4K now, but titles in the next year or two will be pushing the limit. The 1080p or 1440p experience would be all-round better (and I don't believe 1440p TV screens exist).

I'm not sure what this PC does to warrant the title 'console-killer' when true-4K is going at under £500 (and up-scaled 4K even less) on the console market.

With the Trident (and any gaming PC) it's a high initial outlay, but with the benefit that years down the line you'll still be able to drop in a new, speedier GPU, maybe a touch more RAM, and still be gaming at a pretty high level for a minimal upgrade cost.

In three to five years your Xbox One X will be looking increasingly obsolete, and you'll be expected to pay out £600 for a whole new system.

With discounts and clever shopping at launch my PS4 was under £300 I seem to remember paying more when I got my GTX980 so your price comparison is way out when the consoles generally cost about the same as a high end graphics card, that is before counting the future need to change the CPU and other bits to not restrict the new GPU.

Really all marketing it as a console killer tells anyone is that the project will ultimately be a failure as it doesn't have a target audience.